Which would really mean (I assume because next was the last parameter?):

producer.start(next: {value in ...})

The Swift 2.0 compiler (Xcode 7 b6, at least) makes a different decision about what we're trying to do. Due to the fact that we're passing a single block parameter, it now assumes that we want to call the start(sink: Event<T, E>.Sink) method instead. This is our clue that something's not right, as we start seeing that our blocks are being passed variables of type Event<YourType, NoError> rather than the expected type.

The solution is easy: either just be clearer about what you're calling by reinstating the next: parameter name:

producer.start(next: {value in ...})`

.. or provide more type information in your closure, to help the poor compiler out:

producer.start { (displayableAnnotations: YourType) in ... }

.Put()

We no longer use .put(x) to set the value on a MutableProperty type - .value is now settable, so we just get and set .value directly. This is probably good, though I liked the separation before - it made it more obvious that MutableProperty also dealt in events. But like I say, it's probably simpler now.

Edit: Extra!

Don't forget to remove the Box dependancy as well, because it's no longer needed with Swift 2.0